Two underwater sea lilies were eaten and regurgitated around 66 million years ago. They were preserved as fossilized vomit.
A SCIENTIST made a bizarre discovery after breaking open a piece of chalk and finding 66 million-year-old fish vomit. The ...
A local fossil hunter found animal vomit at a Danish geological site that is believed to be 66 million years old.
Paleontologists typically unearth fossilized skeletal remains of ancient creatures, however, this time they found ...
Truly unusual’ fossil discovery shows us what fish ate 66 million years ago - Bizarre fossil found on Denmark’s Cliffs of ...
The fossil was found at a cliff in Denmark. Fossilized vomit is called regurgitalite, and it's a type of trace fossil, which ...
In the quiet cliffs of Stevns, Denmark, a 79-year-old amateur fossil hunter split open a piece of chalk last November and ...
Amateur fossil hunter Peter Bennicke made a “truly unusual find”, as the fossilised vomit now resides in the Museum of East ...
A paleontologist hailed the discovery as "truly an unusual find," adding it helped explain the relationships in the prehistoric food chain.
Less than a decade later, World War II swallowed Germany. The fossils were housed in the Old Academy building of the Bavarian ...
The scientific term for fossilized vomit is regurgitalite. Surprisingly, the timeless throw up is far from the oldest out ...